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This is a great post! Sometimes I feel like half of my waking hours are devoted to avoiding meetings. So little gets done there. The worst is when you're telecommuting and people want to drag you into the office for a "necessary" meeting. Fun!
Take care,
Andrew
Which is necessary for some people, but u might want to put in the caveat that it's not applicable to all management situations.
Good tips, but I have to say that when I had a job, I loved boring meetings :)
Michael - I understand what you're saying. For me, it depends on the team. If they can handle the flexibility - more importantly if the leader of the meeting can handle the flexibility and control the meeting - it can work very well to have a looser agenda. If not, you get either chaos or atrophy.
Ann - interesting tip. I'll give it a try next time. Maybe you command a bit more attention + focus while standing and it's harder to type on your BlackBerry under the desk while standing...
I've played this role in strategic planning and organizational development meetings for larger organizations where you might have 20 principles in the meeting - all wanting to be heard. At that point, it's vital to have someone as moderator. And it should be known who that person is and their responsibilities before the meeting begins.
The point is really - "Too many chiefs never works." You need people who are participating not all trying to lead.
This issue is the number one source of pain and sense of being out of control for my executive clients.
http://www.randsinrepose.com/archives/2006/11/1...
http://blog.kitetail.com/2006/12/01/death-by-a-...
Good point about the documentation. I use a software called meetings sense (http://www.meetingsense.com) which has automated the whole process. It also gives the option of setting a firm agenda to stop the soapboxers in their tracks :)
http://www.meetingsense.com